Desk Jockey
Member
I believe he is out buying slip-on's. He can't figure out how to tie his shoes. 

Keep Marty Agitated?I'm here, and both of you retards can KMA.
Oh dear Gawd........I've been using this simple SHAMPOO method since the late 90's.
And if you don't think these encap scampoos aren't SHAMPOOS then well you've been reading too many fruit loops boxes.
It is simply amazing when someone discovers something OLD and suddenly makes it NEW.
But in reality it all reminds me of a time when I had a retard grocery bagger take several minutes to explain to me how he was bagging my groceries and the difference between paper and plastic sacks.
But in reality it all reminds me of a time when I had a retard grocery bagger take several minutes to explain to me how he was bagging my groceries and the difference between paper and plastic sacks.
Have you ever see Brad Pitt?I don't know what you look like,
No Shane he just smells like "Fish"...rotten fish in a hot summers sun.Makes sense, always pictured him like Fish from barney miller.
You're too kind Scott. I just happen to like the subject.
Scott Warrington should answer this, as the representative of the manufacturer. I'll just add what I know from experience, and that doesn't mean my answer is nearly right:
(I apologize to any who hate long threads, this is going to be an article....)
1. The protection in most encapsulation products is primarily one that imparts an ability to resist dry soil. That doesn't mean there can't be some spill resistance, but I've yet to see anything nearly as effective as a post treatment of protector after hot water extraction.
2. The addition of an acid dye resistor to such products enhances acid dye resistance, but acid dye resistors do not seem to improve resistance to other water based spills, or oil spills.
3. When using encapsulant products for cleaning upholstery, we primarily are using them as a "shampoo" (with a nod to Jimmy Ladwig) that happens to have some very good soil removal characteristics not often found in conventional upholstery cleaning shampoos. Following up with towel extraction and/or wet vacuuming removes most of the product, which is desirable in upholstery cleaning. That also means that any "built in protection" would be somewhat limited afterward.
4. Compatibility with protector? This part is something that is best answered by Scott, or outside of BP products, Rick Gelinas. I will only say that I have found that upholstery protectors often fail to live up to the "watch how good this works on a napkin" hype when applied to fabrics that have any detergent residue left over. Make no mistake: Even when you "rinse" afterward, most upholstery cleaning preconditioners are difficult to rinse from the fabric, especially when we deliberately use "low wetting tools" to prevent other problems of browning and bleeding. In many ways, we leave as much detergent in upholstery fabric as a "dry foam guy" does, unless the fabric is only lightly soiled and we keep our preconditioning step at a "light mist" application.
Unless the protection manufacturers can show me otherwise, I don't see great results with furniture protection unless the furniture is only lightly soiled and very thoroughly rinsed.
I have not yet tried this after an encap cleaning of furniture....I will be doing that this week just because this question really piques my interest.
Of course, any of you can (and should) do the same. Its not like this is the busiest time of year out there....